Monday, March 18, 2013

Accused of Sexual Assault of a Child in Houston? Call Harris County Criminal Lawyer Jim Sullivan

Harris County Criminal Lawyer Jim Sullivan has been very successful in getting Sexual Assault of a Child cases No Billed (dismissed) by the Grand Jury.  In just the past three years, Sullivan has fought these cases and prevailed in 5 such cases as detailed below. You can call Jim Sullivan and Associates right now at 281-546-6428.
 
When a case is No Billed by the Grand Jury, the accused has the right to immediately seek an expunction of his criminal record.  Because prosecutors generally seek to present the case to the Grand Jury between the first and setting court setting, it is extremely important to hire a defense attorney right away.  Unless a defense attorney requests that the prosecutor hold the case from the Grand Jury in order to prepare a defense packet, the prosecutor will seek an indictment from the Grand Jury.
 
Attorney Jim Sullivan
Once an accused is indicted, this option is no longer available.  If found guilty by a jury or if placed on deferred adjudication probation for this type of offense, the accused would be required to register as a sex offender for life.  Time is of the essence in retaining a knowledgeable defense attorney.

Statutory Rape in Texas is charged as Sexual Assault of a Child, a serious felony offense. If convicted as an adult, the defendant is required to register as a sex offender for life. If the alleged child victim is between 14 to 16 years of age, the crime is a second degree felony and punishable by 2 to 20 years in prison for each count in the indictment. If the alleged child victim is under 14 years of age, the crime is a first degree felony and punishable by 5 to 99 years in prison for each count in the indictment.
 
These cases seem to be more and more common. A 23 year old male name "John" goes to a friend's house party and meets an attractive, willing woman who says she is 18 years of age. They have consensual sex in one of the bedrooms. Several days later, he learns that she is really 14 years of age and that her mother found out about it and called the police.

John now faces serious sex offense charges. There are several important legal issues to consider:
  • In Texas, for purposes of the Sexual Assault of a Child and Indecency with a Child crimes, a child does not become an adult until age 17. For other sexual-related offenses, including Possession of Child Pornography and Sexual Performance of a Child, the age of an adult is 18 years.
  • In Texas, it is not a defense that the accused did not know the child's real age. So, the alleged victim could have lied about her age to the accused and the accused will still face criminal charges.
  • The alleged victim cannot legally consent to sexual relations unless the alleged victim is 14 years of age or older and there is only a 3 year or less difference between the ages of the alleged victim and the accused.
  • In Texas, only one eye-witness, the alleged victim, is sufficient for conviction, so long as the jury believes the alleged victim beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • In Texas, neither genital trauma nor DNA evidence is required for a conviction.
  • In Texas, voluntary intoxication is not a defense. So, if the accused goes to a party, gets drunk and sleeps with an underage girl, he cannot use his intoxication as a defense to the crime of Sexual Assault of a Child.
  • In Texas, each separate sexual act can be separately charged within one indictment and, if there is a conviction, each Count can be stacked or served consecutively.
With these types of sexual offenses, there are many other legal issues involved. If a person is charged with sexual assault of a child, possession of child pornography or any type of sex offense, it is important to retain a criminal defense attorney who is experienced defending Texas sex offenses.
 
Jim Sullivan and Associates are Houston Criminal Defense and Juvenile Defense Attorney with over 40 combined years of defense experience.  Jim Sullivan is also Board Certified in Juvenile Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization.  Juvenile Law is different than criminal law (see Juvenile Crime). Note: Among the more than 83,000 active lawyers in Texas, there are only 38 lawyers Board Certified in Juvenile Law in private practice.  

DATE
CASE #
CT #
TEXAS CRIMINAL OFFENSE
ACTUAL RESULT










04/19/12
1332791
185th
SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD (2° Felony)
NO BILLED BY GRAND JURY (Client accused of having consensual sex with underage girl he met on online after she falsely claimed that she was 18)
12/03/10
1283460
232nd
SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD (2° Felony)
NO BILLED BY GRAND JURY (Client accused of consensual sex with underage female)
08/24/10
1264919
232ND
SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD (2° Felony)
NO BILLED BY GRAND JURY (Client accused of consensual sex with underage female)
04/28/10
1220515
179TH
SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD (2° Felony)
DISMISSED BY STATE PRIOR TO TRIAL SETTING (Client accused of committing sexual assault against a young relative)
11/23/09
1231727
179TH
SEXUAL ASSAULT OF A CHILD (2° Felony)
NO BILLED BY GRAND JURY (Client accused of consensual sex with underage female)
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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Probation Violation Lawyer Jim Sullivan Fights in Houston to Keep Clients on Probation

Houston Drug Defense Attorney Jim Sullivan defends people accused of violating their misdemeanor or felony probation in Harris and surrounding counties.  Since 1994, Jim Sullivan has kept hundreds of people on regular and deferred adjudication probation (see Case Results).  
 
On most misdemeanor cases, if a person successfully completes their deferred adjudication probation, then they can seek to get their criminal record sealed (non-disclosed) to the public.  For felony cases that qualify, the person can do this 5 years after successfully completing their deferred probation.
 
If the State has filed a Motion to Revoke your Probation or to Adjudicate your Guilt, you can call 
defense Attorney Jim Sullivan at 281-546-6428 to discuss your case.
 
According to a recent article in the Houston Chronicle, The Harris County Probation Department has recently come under fire for serious problems in the handling of drug testing for people on probation or on bond.  According to evidence uncovered and brought to light in a recent hearing, the integrity of drug testing in the department may not be trusted due to clerical errors, faulty record keeping, mislabeling of samples and a sloppy chain of custody.  Because of these serious problems, many people may have been arrested or had their probation revoked based on false positives.  A local defense attorney alleges a systemic problem and calls for sweeping overhauls.

Witness: Error ruined his life
   
By Brian Rogers
 
A man who spent 10 days in jail last year because of a clerical error in Harris County’s probation department testified Friday that the mistake cost him his driver’s license, his job and his home.  “I’m devastated,” Richard Youst said on the witness stand. “It devastated my life.” The 28-year-old said his life fell apart after a false positive on a drug test in April 2011. He had been on probation for driving while intoxicated. “I had to move back in with my mother,” the 28-year-old said. “I sleep on an air mattress on the floor.”    
 
Youst’s story is one of several that [his] attorney… said she uncovered while investigating the Harris County Community Supervision and Corrections Department.  “It’s hard to quantify all of the hurt and the wrong that’s been done to him because of this simple mistake that they refused to fix… His case did not have to happen. They knew about these types of mistakes a year before.”   
Opium Presumptive Drug Test
Opium Presumptive Drug Test (Photo credit: Jack Spades)

Evidence uncontested   

[The attorney] is putting the county’s probation department on trial in an unconventional hearing that was supposed to be a routine probation revocation for one of her clients.  The evidence that Youst’s test was false was uncontested Friday. [The] broader point is that clerical errors, faulty record keeping and other problems may mean no urine tests done by the probation department can be trusted. The division tests more than 25,000 urine samples a month for suspects out on bail and others who are on probation.    

Some of the problems include mislabeling samples, data entry problems and a lack of audits or oversights to catch mistakes. A supervisor who testified Friday said finding 3-month-old urine samples in the back of the division’s unlocked refrigerators was not uncommon.  The old samples would simply be sent out as though they had been collected that day, said Donald Martin, a supervisor at the department.  As part of the court-mandated “chain of custody” that ensures the integrity of evidence, law enforcement has to show that an appropriate custodian has kept evidence from being tampered with before it can be admitted in court.  “When it comes to chain of custody,” Martin testified, “there are more holes than Swiss cheese.”   

False positives found   

Deputy Director of Operations Kim Ballentine declined to answer questions about the allegations because of the ongoing hearing and the pending underlying criminal case… The agency also released a statement saying there would be no comment Friday on the situation.  [The attorney] said she believes an untold number of probationers and people who are awaiting trial may have been jailed or sanctioned for false positives.  “One source testified that there are at least 32 cases that they recently discovered,” she said. “And that’s just scratching the surface.”    Besides keeping her client out of jail, [the attorney] wants supervisors at the probation department fired and the agency revamped.  She also questioned how prosecutors can now legally revoke probationers for positive tests.  “You want to know that there is integrity in the evidence… I don’t know how the district attorney’s office can rely on any urinalysis from this probation department.”    The Harris County District Attorney’s Office released a statement that it plans to review all of the allegations after the hearing ends…

Friday, August 17, 2012

Your Freedom Matters. Call Jim Sullivan the Criminal Lawyer in Houston

Houston Criminal Defense Attorney Jim Sullivan fights the government every day to keep his clients out of prison.  On every case, his first goal is to work for a dismissal, either by the Grand Jury (see results) or by the prosecutor.  Because the government does not like to dismiss cases, it often requires defense attorneys to force their hand by setting the case for a jury trial.  Unlike many of his colleagues who set cases for trial just to get a better plea deal, Jim Sullivan sets cases for trial because he intends to try the case (see trial results).

When defendants do get sentenced to prison time, they are now doing less and less time.  According to a recent Houston Chronicle article (see below), parole officials lately have come to the common sense realization that it is a waste of money to lock up low level non-violent offenders and to keep the dangerous criminals in prison longer.  As a result, over the past 10 years, six percent more offenders who apply for parole are granted it.  At the same time, the number of parolees who were sent back to prison after their parole was revoked has fallen dramatically–44%.
 
State cheers rise in paroles
Officials say reforms are ‘smart on crime’ while saving money
By Cindy Horswell
 
Texas continues a steady march away from its Old West image of being tough on crime to one that state leaders now call “smart on crime” and even fiscally “right on crime.”  Nothing makes that more apparent than the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole’s newly released bragging rights: More prisoners were paroled this past fiscal year than any other year in the past decade, and fewer parolees are being sent back.    
The board’s report this week boasts 24,342 offenders were approved for parole from Sept. 1, 2010, to Aug. 31, 2011. This represents 31 percent of all who applied and an approval rate that is six percentage points higher than 10 years ago. At the same time, the number carted back to prison this past fiscal year after their parole was revoked plummeted by 44 percent from a high of 11,374 in 2004. 
Instead of fearing accusations of appearing too lenient, state authorities are smiling. “We are pleased with our continuing increase in granting parole,” said Rissie Owens, chairwoman of the state’s pardons and parole board. “The use of our parole guidelines to assess the likelihood of a successful parole outcome has been cited as a national model for its positive impact on returning more offenders to productive lives.” The Association of Paroling Authorities International has praised Texas’ system which many other states are copying, said board spokesman Harry Battson... 
A smarter approach     
State Sen. John Whit-mire, D-Houston, is the architect of many of the prison reforms in Texas. Whitmire said the state has always been the toughest in the nation on punishment, but now it’s being smarter.    “We lock up the dangerous violent offenders for longer periods while trying to change the lifestyles of the low-level offenders,” he said.   
Rather than build three new prisons in 2007, funds were shifted to treatment programs for drug and alcohol addictions, anger management, counseling and education. “We’ve saved the taxpayer at least $2 billion that way. The treatment programs only cost us $180 million, and we still have room for the really bad guys,” said Texas Rep. Jerry Madden, R-Richardson, the correction committee chairman. He noted every person incarcerated costs the state about $50 per day.     
Besides gutting the building program, a 1,000-bed prison in Sugar Land was also closed last year. This is possible as the number of actual inmates housed by the state dropped by 2,500 last year to 154,000, the lowest number in five years, records show... 
The parole department’s report showed the highest release rate occurred in one of the worst crime categories: violent aggravated sexual assaults. Nearly 42 percent of those candidates considered for parole were released in the last fiscal year.     
However, Battson, the parole department spokesman, stressed that the actual number of violent sex offenders released is relatively small and they are nearing the end of their sentences. This category accounted for 1,849 of the 24,342 released.     
The data give positive feedback that even though more parolees are being released, they are committing fewer crimes. The number of new crimes dropped 3 percent last year compared to the previous year. cindy.horswell@chron.com

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Houston Criminal Attorney Jim Sullivan Represents Clients from Around the World

This is a map which shows the countries of dif...Houston Criminal Defense Attorney Jim Sullivan has defended clients in jury trials since 1994.  He has represented over 3,000 clients.  He defends and fights for those accused of breaking the law.  He represents people from around the world, from many diverse countries, ethnic groups, religions and customs.  He has represent people from literally every continent and over 75 countries.
Jim Sullivan studied Journalism, Latin American and Asian studies at Baylor University.  He also speaks Spanish.  In 1988, traveled to the war zone areas of northern Nicaragua on a Christian mission trip.  In 1990, he lived in Mexico and has traveled throughout on the country.  In fact, he has hundreds of in-laws living throughout Mexico--from the states of Guerrero to Chiapas.  He has also visited Italy,  Canada, Mexico, Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
Jim Sullivan has represented many Spanish-speaking clients in criminal and juvenile court.  He literally has represented clients from around the world and from all faiths.  His understanding of different cultures has enabled him to get many cases dismissed based on a multitude of reasons--from cultural misunderstandings to psychological problems that were exacerbated by the need to "save face" in Asian cultures.
If you want serious representation, call Jim Sullivan right now at 281-546-6428.
Serving Houston, Galveston, Angleton, Pearland, Alvin, Sugar Land, Bellville, Clear Lake, Conroe, Pasadena, La Porte, Missouri City, Texas City, Friendswood, Richmond, Rosenberg, Corpus Christi, Brownsville, San Antonio, Laredo, El Paso, El Campo, Austin County, San Marcos, Dallas, Denton, Plano, Lubbock, Midland, Anahuac, Beaumont, Hempstead, Huntsville, Liberty, The Woodlands, Humble, Tomball, League City, Bellaire, Deer Park, and Katy and other communities in Austin County, Brazoria County, Chambers County, Colorado County, Fort Bend County, Galveston County, Harris County, Jefferson County, Liberty County, Montgomery County, Waller County, Walker County and Wharton County.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Houston Drug Defense Attorney Jim Sullivan Believes His Clients

Attorney Jim Sullivan
Houston Criminal Attorney Jim Sullivan believes his clients.  He advises his clients to tell him what happened and develops a specific defense strategy based on that story.  Many such stories may seem unbelievable or incredible to the layperson or even other attorneys, but Sullivan is a true believer and investigates and defends cases based on those versions of events.

As a result, Jim Sullivan has been successful at trial in what others term “hopeless” cases.  In his very first felony jury trial in April 1997, in the 209th District Court in Cause Number 745708, Jim Sullivan represented a 21 year old black man accused of killing a young white man in a head-on car accident on Eldridge Parkway in northwest Houston.  The decedent attended Texas A&M and belonged to a wealthy family.  A large group of white male retirees from the victim’s rights organization Justice for All attended every court setting.  A successful black prosecutor, who later became an Assistant U.S. Attorney (federal prosecutor), handled the prosecution.

Example of a Serious Accident
The accused allegedly had cocaine in his system, was driving over the speed limit in the rain, on the wrong side of the road and with “bald” tires.  The force of the impact caused the engine from one of the cars to be ejected and thrown about 50 feet from the car.  Unfortunately, the late model Corvette the decedent was driving did not have an air bag, and the driver was killed instantly when his head hit the steering wheel.

The accused insisted that he did not do drugs and that it was just an accident that resulted in the death of the decedent.  Even so, if the State had offered him probation, he said he would take it so that he could continue to work to support his family.  Because the State only offered prison time, five years at TDC, the accused chose to go to trial.  Other attorneys, including the original attorney appointed to represent him, predicted a guilty verdict and 10 years in prison, the maximum prison sentence available.

The accused denied using drugs and testified he was on his way to work for a local service station.  The accused had auto insurance.  Sullivan hired a drug toxicologist expert who conducted his own lab tests and who questioned the validity of the blood tests conducted by the Houston Police Lab.  Photographs that crime scene investigators took of his client’s tires (and which did not surface until the day of trial) reflected that they had sufficient tread and the inspection sticker was current on his car.  The defendant’s stepfather, a local mechanic, testified as to the tire tread.  Due to the heavy rain, the client’s car hydroplaned across lanes and struck the decedent’s car head on.  On cross examination, a State’s eyewitness testified the accused was only going 5-10 miles above the speed limit.  The accused and his wife testified that he did not use drugs.

Right before closing arguments, the large courtroom in the former criminal courthouse (now the Harris County Juvenile Justice Center) filled up with high school students who were visiting the courthouse that day.  No pressure.  To be guilty of negligent homicide, Sullivan argued to the jury, requires gross negligence and not simple negligence.  What happened to the accused could have happened to any of us–an unforeseeable accident tragically claims the life of a young man.  A tragedy yes, a crime no.  The case belonged in the civil courthouse, not the criminal.  After about 10 minutes of deliberation, the jury returned a not guilty verdict.

Houston Criminal Lawyer Jim Sullivan went on to win acquittals and dismissals in many other serious felony criminal and juvenile cases.  As a Christian, Sullivan strives to be affordable to most people and counsels his clients to get on a better path.  In fact, many of his clients have overcome their difficulties in life and become successful in their chosen endeavors.  Sullivan may not see the end results and how the lives of his many exonerated clients unfold, but he strives to do well for all of his clients and get the best results possible.  If you need a defense attorney, you can call him right now at 281-546-6428.

As one of the late, great religious leaders who courageously struggled and died for social justice and in whom Jim Sullivan was greatly  inspired once said,
We cannot do everything, and there is a sense of liberation in realizing that.  This enables us to do something, and to do it very well…  We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the Master Builder and the worker.  ~Archbishop Oscar Romero (1917-1980)
Archbishop Oscar Romero
Oscar Arnulfo Romero y Goldámez was Archbishop of the Catholic Church in San Salvador, El Salvador.  In the late 1970s and 1980s, a civil war waged.  In all, at least 75,000 – 80,000 Salvadorans would be slaughtered; 300,000 would disappear and never be seen again; a million would flee their homeland; and an additional million would become homeless fugitives, constantly fleeing the military and police. All of this occurred in a nation of only 5.5 million people.

On March 24, 1980, while performing a funeral mass in the Chapel of Divine Providence Hospital, Archbishop Oscar Romero was shot to death by a paid assassin.  Only moments before his death, he had reminded the mourners of the parable of wheat. His prophetic words:
Those who surrender to the service of the poor through love of Christ will live like the grain of wheat that dies…  The harvest comes because of the grain that dies…  We know that every effort to improve society, above all when society is so full of injustice and sin, is an effort that God blesses, that God wants, that God demands of us.
Nicaraguan Contras training in Honduras
In the summer 1988, at age 20, Jim Sullivan traveled with a Christian organization to the war zone areas of northern Nicaragua to offer support to poor refugee families.  Although Americans in Nicaragua were not targeted by the contras, the refugee camp which Sullivan visited was frequently attacked by contras.  The camp was located about 50 kilometers south of the Honduran border in the corridor which the contras used to invade the country.

After graduating from Baylor University in May 1990, Jim Sullivan lived in Mexico City and traveled throughout the country.  His experiences in seeing the horrific suffering in Nicaragua and the social injustice in Mexico and elsewhere were just a few of his significant life experiences which led to his becoming a defense attorney and his strong passion in representing the accused, especially juveniles who he has been able to guide onto a better path and a successful life.

HOUSTON CRIMINAL LAWYERS
Serving clients throughout Texas, including Houston, Galveston, Angleton, Pearland, Alvin, Sugar Land, Bellville, Clear Lake, Conroe, Pasadena, La Porte, Missouri City, Texas City, Friendswood, Richmond, Rosenberg, Corpus Christi, Brownsville, San Antonio, Laredo, El Paso, El Campo, Austin, San Marcos, Dallas, Denton, Plano, Lubbock, Midland, Anahuac, Beaumont, Hempstead, Huntsville, Liberty, The Woodlands, Humble, Tomball, League City, Bellaire, Deer Park, and Katy and other communities in Austin County, Brazoria County, Chambers County, Colorado County, Fort Bend County, Galveston County, Harris County, Jefferson County, Liberty County, Montgomery County, Waller County, Walker County and Wharton County.